Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care, Sport Recreation

Mouthguard warning for junior footy and rugby seasons

12 March, 2025 2 mins read

With 100,000 sport-related concussions occurring in Australia each year, Aussie parents and local athletes are being urged to be ‘mouthguard safe’ ahead of the 2025 junior and amateur AFL and rugby seasons to give themselves the best chance of avoiding serious head or oral injuries.

The warning comes amidst research suggesting there is one concussion every 5.7 games in youth Rugby League. While separate studies from the Australian Dental Association suggest sports-related injuries account for nearly 40 per cent of dental injuries, yet only 36 per cent of Australians wear a mouthguard when playing contact sport.

Dr Cathryn Madden, Head Dentist at Bupa Dental said a properly fitted mouthguard is a players’ best defence against serious sports injuries like broken jaws, fractured teeth and even lacerated tongues which can be involuntarily bitten during an unexpected hit.

“Whilst less expensive over-the-counter boil and bite mouthguards are certainly better than zero protection, they run a significantly higher risk of being dislodged or not protecting all essential areas which increases the risk of sustaining a serious injury for players.

“A custom-made mouthguard will be designed to fit a player’s individual mouth shape and dimensions providing a player with the protection they need on game day or training and a parent with valuable peace of mind when watching from the sidelines,” Cathryn said. 

Bupa Health Insurance members with eligible Extras cover who attend participating Bupa Dental Members First Ultimate clinics will also receive a no-gap experience on standard fitted mouthguards across its national network of practices.

“Once you have your mouthguard sorted, you can focus more on enjoying the game and all the physical and mental benefits that come with being involved in community sport.

“All it takes is a short visit to your friendly local dental clinic to get a scan or impression of your teeth and choose your favourite team colours for the mouthguard before a subsequent visit to ensure the mouthguard fits firmly and comfortably,” Cathryn said.

ENDS


Editors note:

 

Cathryn Madden, Head Dentist at Bupa Dental is available for interview.

 

For more information or interview requests, please contact:

 

Eli Grynberg                                                   
External Communications Manager, Bupa                             
Email:
[email protected]     

Mob: 0401 135 713                                                       

 

About Bupa Asia Pacific

Bupa is an international healthcare group which has been committed to a purpose of helping people live longer, healthier, happier lives and making a better world for more than 70 years.

Bupa Asia Pacific operates in Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong, supporting about 7.3 million customers through a broad range of health and care services including health insurance, aged care, dental, medical, optical and hearing services.

Employing more than 22,000 people in the region, we believe that we can make a real difference to the lives of customers through our values, purpose and the way that we deliver personalised care.

Over the past 17+ years we have invested more than AUD$36 million in partnerships and programs focused on improving health of communities across Australia.



 

 


Contact details:

Eli Grynberg                                                   
External Communications Manager, Bupa                             
Email:
[email protected]     

Mob: 0401 135 713   

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Research Development
  • 11/07/2025
  • 16:28
The Florey

Harnessing mRNA to prevent and slow Alzheimer’s disease

mRNA Victoria funds 2Floreyprojects to prevent and treat Alzheimer’s disease Key points mRNA Victoria has funded 2 Alzheimer’s disease research projects that could position Victoria as a leader in the development of mRNA-based therapies. Dr Abdel Belaidi will develop an mRNA-based system that crosses the blood-brain barrier and aims to slow or even halt disease progression. Dr Rebecca Nisbet will develop an mRNA vaccine that aims to prevent Alzheimer’s disease from developing. Florey researchers working at the cutting edge of dementia research have received funding from mRNA Victoria to develop treatments and a vaccine for Alzheimer’s disease. Since mRNA vaccines…

  • Local Government, Sport Recreation
  • 11/07/2025
  • 15:10
North Sydney Council

Pitch Perfect: New Cricket Deal for North Sydney Oval

North Sydney Council, in partnership with Cricket Australia and Cricket NSW, today announced a new five-year venue hire agreement for North Sydney Oval. This…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 11/07/2025
  • 07:05
Royal Australian College of GPs

GPs urge Tasmanian families to get vaccinated against whooping cough and call for free shots to reduce barriers

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) is urging Tasmanian families to get vaccinated against pertussis, or ‘whooping cough’ and called on all parties and candidates running in the state election to commit to making the vaccination free for all patients. From 1 January 2024 to April 2025, 1238 whooping cough cases were notified in Tasmania, including 10 infants aged under six months. Most hospitalisations and deaths occur in this group, who are not old enough to have received all vaccine doses. More than 21,000 infections were recorded nationwide last year, compared to just 2450 in 2023, and the National…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.